I'm with Nico. I want a straight to dvd (or internet?) Spumco Popeye. Doesn't have to be a sacred cow hamburger like the amazing Boo Boo Gone Wild...just something that lets to give the gift of how Popeye makes you feel to the rest of us.

Could you please briefly discuss your thinking behind some of your unorthodox color choices(e.g., Popeye's grey outline and grey color in his face,as opposed to the obvious flesh color choice)? It looks great, but how did you know that it would? Markers are so unforgiving, yet your piece is very bold and spontaneous, without any hint of hesitancy.

Hey, John Kricfalusi, if you want an example of poorly-done animation, I found a rather quirky low budget series.

I watch eps of a really low-budget animation series from Toei Animation called Yu-Gi-Oh! (the 27-episode 1998 television show that has NOT been dubbed. No, this is NOT the same series as the Yu-Gi-Oh! that aired in America) and some of the animation quirks are amazing.*In episode 11 (at about 11:00) when Yugi and his friends are talking about Warashibe in the cafeteria, they (and they are in the background) are the only people in the cafeteria moving and talking. Everyone else is still and silent! (Other than that the episode is interesting as it stars an eccentric, Capsule Monsters-obsessed stalker going after a ditz (Miho), calling her the "Capmon Queen" - He has a "secret base" (underground warehouse) where he wants to keep Miho)*In episode 17 (at about 9:34) when Yugi's hands touch the glass and he talks to Ailean, his hands look really strange!

This series did not go beyond 27 episodes; I do not know WHY, but maybe the really low budget animation hurt the series.

If you want to find it, you will have to use fansubbing websites. As I said it was never released in the USA.